Technical Field of the Invention
[0001] This invention concerns a milling insert of the type that comprises an upper side,
an under side, and a clearance face extending between the same, as well as a cutting
edge, which is running along a cutting edge line and formed in a transition between
the upper side and the clearance face and includes two main edges that converge toward
and meet in a nose edge, the milling insert having a positive cutting geometry so
far that an angle between the clearance face and a normal to the upper side is acute.
Background of the Invention
[0002] The invention has its origin in problems that are associated with milling inserts,
more precisely such replaceable milling inserts that are included in tools for so-called
hobbing or gear hobbing. Gear hobbing is a relatively new milling method by means
of which slots can be milled out of the envelope surface of metallic workpieces having
a rotationally symmetrical shape with the ultimate purpose of forming ridges, e.g.
in the form of cogs, spline bars or the like, which generally run parallel to the
centre axis of the surface of revolution. Briefly, this special milling method means
that the workpiece is set in rotation at a moderate rotational speed, at the same
time as a high-speed rotating milling tool, which is equipped with milling inserts
located in screw formations in relation to the rotation axis of the tool, is given
a slow, axial feeding motion during which the individual milling insert first enters
the workpiece while removing a relatively small chip, and then leaves ("rolls off")
the workpiece. In a later moment, when the workpiece has rotated one revolution, a
milling insert, which has been fed forward axially a short distance, will once again
enter the initiated slot and remove more material from the workpiece. This is repeated
until the recessed slot has obtained the desired length. In comparison with traditional
gear milling, gear hobbing affords the advantage that the machining can be carried
out faster and more cost-effective.
[0003] Modern milling inserts for gear hobbing are so-called full profile inserts, i.e.,
milling inserts that in the moment of engagement remove a chip along two converging
main edges as well as along an end or nose edge in one and the same pass.
[0004] Within all forms of cutting or chip removing machining of metal blanks, the design
of the cutting edges of the cutting inserts has a large bearing on the performance
of the tool, above all in respect of the dimensional accuracy and surface finish of
the manufactured components. In this respect, hob cutters are no exception. On the
contrary, the dimensional accuracy of the flank surfaces that delimit the slots between
adjacent ridges of the workpiece, e.g. the gashes between two adjacent cogs, has a
large bearing on the function of the component. In many cases, no finishing is required
if the generated flank surfaces already during the milling obtains a good dimensional
accuracy and surface finish. Even if finishing would be called for in individual cases,
the waste of time and the cost therefor is, however, decreased, if the critical surfaces
of the milled component already initially have a good dimensional accuracy.
[0005] In this connection, it should be pointed out that the basic body of the milling tool
usually is manufactured from steel, while the replaceable milling inserts are manufactured
from a material that is harder and more wear-resistant than steel, e.g. cemented carbide
or the like. This usually takes place in facilities that are separated from each other.
When the milling inserts are manufactured from cemented carbide, the outcome in the
manufacture may vary from milling insert to milling insert. Among other things, the
micro geometry of the cutting edges may vary. For this reason, directly pressed milling
inserts, i.e., milling inserts that are not ground, obtain their final shape already
in connection with pressing and sintering, a mediocre dimensional accuracy in the
context, above all in respect of the exact spatial location of the cutting edge line.
The requirements of dimensional accuracy of the cutting edges are at times extreme
and may be about 0,01 mm or less.
[0006] Like other replaceable milling inserts, milling inserts have a limited service life
(often within the range of 5-10 min), and therefore the same are mass-produced in
large series. As a consequence of the limited service life, frequent insert replacements
are required to maintain a good manufacturing precision. This means that the cost
of the milling inserts has a vital importance to the user and his/her possibilities
to keep down the manufacturing cost. Of the total cost of a high-performance milling
insert, the cost of grinding is a considerable part.
Prior Art
[0007] A milling insert of the type initially mentioned and intended for gear hobbing is
previously known by
US 5593254. In this case, the upper side of the milling insert has in its entirety the shape
of a plane surface, which serves as a chip surface. Furthermore, the clearance face
extends all the way from the upper side to a likewise plane under side, which is intended
to abut against a plane support surface of a tooth included in the tool. If said milling
insert would need to be ground to provide a good dimensional accuracy of the cutting
edge, the total grinding area, i.e., the entire upper side and the entire clearance
face adjacent to the cutting edge, becomes so large that the share of the grinding
cost of the total manufacturing cost of the milling insert becomes disproportionately
large.
[0008] Another disadvantage of known milling inserts of the kind in question is of grinding
technical nature, depending on there being a difference between face grinding and
peripheral grinding. Face grinding of the upper side and possibly also the under side
of a milling insert is traditionally carried out by a rotary grinding wheel or cylinder
grinding wheel being kept pressed against the grinding surface in question. If both
the upper side and the under side are to be ground, two contrarotating grinding wheels
are kept pressed against the two grinding surfaces, the milling insert being kept
loosely in place by a mask, e.g. in the way disclosed in
US 6007766. Grinding of the peripheral clearance surface is, however, carried out in an entirely
different step,
viz. in a peripheral grinding machine, in which the milling insert is clamped in a well-defined
position at the same time as a rotary abrasive, e.g. a pin, sweeps forward along the
periphery of the milling insert. The fact that grinding of the chip and clearance
surfaces of the individual cutting edge is carried out in two different steps means
that the precision of the grinding becomes difficult to check and control, in particular
in the light of the milling insert during the face grinding step not being kept fixed
in a geometrically well-defined position.
Objects and Features of the Invention
[0009] The present invention aims at obviating the above-mentioned disadvantages of previously
known milling inserts and at providing an improved milling insert. A primary object
of the invention is to provide a milling insert, which can be manufactured by extraordinary
precision in respect of the micro geometry and spatial location of the cutting edge
line, without the requisite grinding unnecessarily burdening the total cost of the
manufacture of the milling insert. A further object is to provide a milling insert
that is especially suitable for gear hobbing and allows frequent insert replacements
so as to maintain a good surface quality and good dimensional accuracy of the machined
components.
[0010] According to the invention, the primary object is attained by the cutting edge of
the milling insert being formed between two ground part surfaces situated on both
sides of the cutting edge line,
viz., on one hand, a primary clearance surface, which is included in the clearance face
and is off-plane from a secondary clearance surface, and, on the other hand, a peripheral
chip surface, which is included in the upper side and situated on a higher level than
a land being inside, and which is narrower than the primary clearance surface as well
as has a width of at least 0,3 mm.
[0011] By forming the cutting edge between, on one hand, a chip surface having a limited
width and thereby a limited grinding area, and, on the other hand, a primary clearance
surface the width of which is smaller than the extension of the clearance surface
between the upper side and the under side, the surfaces needing to be ground to provide
extraordinary high dimensional accuracy in respect of the spatial location of the
generated cutting edge line are minimized. In doing so, peripheral grinding of the
chip surface as well as the primary clearance surface in one and the same set-up is
made possible.
[0012] In one embodiment, the width of the primary clearance surface is smaller than the
width of the secondary clearance surface. In such a way, the area of the first-mentioned
part surface requiring grinding is reduced to a minimum.
[0013] In one embodiment, the width of the chip surface amounts to at most 50 % of the width
of the primary clearance surface. In such a way, the grinding area of the chip surface
is minimized at the same time as the primary clearance surface becomes sufficiently
wide to make the cutting edge strong and resistant to the dominant cutting forces.
[0014] In one embodiment, it is stipulated that the projection area of the chip surface
should amount to at most 20 % of the total projection area of the upper side. Therefore,
although the cutting edge can be made by extraordinary dimensional accuracy, only
a smaller part of the upper side of the milling insert needs to be ground.
[0015] In a feasible embodiment, the chip surface of the cutting edge is made plane. In
such a way, the grinding becomes simple and can be carried out by means of a plane
side surface of a grinding wheel.
[0016] In particular when the chip surface has the shape of a plane surface, the same may
in its entirety be situated in a reference plane that defines the upper side of the
milling insert.
[0017] In one embodiment, the under side of the milling insert may include a long narrow
groove, which is running in the same direction as a bisector between the two main
edges of the cutting edge. This groove may on one hand hold the milling insert fixed
laterally when the under side is pressed against a support surface of the basic body
of the tool, and on the other hand be utilized to clamp the milling insert in an accurately
defined location in connection with the grinding of the chip surface and the primary
clearance surface.
[0018] In one embodiment, the under side of the milling insert may also include a second
groove, which is running perpendicular to the first-mentioned one. This second groove
blocks the milling insert from moving in the direction parallel to the first groove,
i.e., in the longitudinal direction of the milling insert, at the same time as the
first groove prevents movement of the milling insert laterally.
Brief Description of the Appended Drawings
[0019] In the drawings:
- Fig. 1
- is a bird's eye view of a first embodiment of the milling insert according to the
invention,
- Fig. 2
- is a worm's eye view of the same cutting insert,
- Fig. 3
- is a planar view from below of the milling insert,
- Fig. 4
- is a plan view from above of the same milling insert,
- Fig. 5
- is an end view of the milling insert,
- Fig. 6
- is a side view of the same,
- Fig. 7
- is a cross section VII-VII in Fig. 4,
- Fig. 8
- is an enlarged detailed section of the section VIII in Fig. 4,
- Fig. 9
- is an analogous detailed section of the section IX-IX in Fig. 4,
- Fig. 10
- is a bird's eye view of an alternative embodiment of the milling insert, and
- Fig. 11
- is a worm's eye view of the milling insert according to Fig. 10.
Detailed Description of Preferred Embodiments of the Invention
[0020] In Figs. 1-9, a milling insert made in accordance with the invention is shown, which
includes an upper side (also denominated "chip face") in its entirety designated 1,
an under side in its entirety designated 2, and a clearance face that extends between
the same and in its entirety is designated 3. Between the upper and under sides 1,
2, a centre axis C of the milling insert extends. This is located in the point of
intersection between two straight reference lines RL1, which is a longitudinal axis,
and RL2, which is a transverse axis, which reference lines RL1, RL2 form right angles
with each other. The axis C also forms a centre axis of a through hole 4 intended
to receive a screw for the fixation of the milling insert in a basic body of the tool
(not shown).
[0021] In the example, the milling insert is indexable by including two alternately usable
cutting edges 5, which are identical in respect of their shape as well as their spatial
location in relation to the centre axis C. Although the cutting edges are identical,
the reference designation 5 has been supplemented with the suffixes
a and b, respectively, so that the cutting edges should be distinguishable in the following
description.
[0022] Each cutting edge is in its entirety V-shaped and includes two main edges 6, which
in the example are straight and converge toward an end or nose edge 7, in which they
meet while forming a single, continuous cutting edge 5. In the example shown, the
nose edge 7 is round, more precisely so far that the cutting edge line thereof is
a circular arc line, which directly transforms into the straight cutting edge lines
of the main edges 6, the last-mentioned ones forming tangents to the circular arc
line. Generally, the cutting edge 5 is formed in the transition between the upper
side 1 and the clearance face 3.
[0023] In the embodiment shown, the milling insert has a positive cutting geometry so far
that the surface of the clearance face situated closest to the upper side forms an
acute angle α with a normal to the reference plane RP1 of the upper side. In the example,
said clearance angle α amounts to 7°. This value may, however, vary upward as well
as downward, e.g. within the range of 5-12°.
[0024] The cutting edge 5 is formed between two ground part surfaces of limited width. One
of said part surfaces is a primary clearance surface 8, which is situated closest
to the upper side of the milling insert and is off-plane from a secondary clearance
surface 9, which extends between the primary clearance surface and the under side
2 of the milling insert. The second part surface is a chip surface 10 that is included
in a peripheral border 11, inside which there extends a land 12 that is situated on
a lower level than the chip surface 10. As is seen in Fig. 8, the primary clearance
surface 8 has a width W1 that is considerably smaller than the width W2 of the secondary
clearance surface 9. In the example, these width measures are measured as the projection
surfaces of the part surfaces 8, 9 as viewed from the side of the milling insert.
In the example, the width W2 of the secondary clearance surface 9 is approximately
twice as large as W1. In the embodiment shown, the two part surfaces 8, 9 are located
in planes that are parallel to each other, implying that the secondary clearance surface
9 has the same clearance angle α as the primary clearance surface 8. In this case,
the plane separation is provided by the primary clearance surface 8 being included
in a border-like, projecting material portion closest to the upper side of the milling
insert.
[0025] Before the milling insert is further described, the difference between a chip surface
and a reinforcement bevel (= reinforcing chamfer surface) will be elucidated in more
detail. A chip surface is the part surface of the milling insert against which the
removed chip is formed. Depending on the field of application, the width of the chip
surface may vary, but amounts at all events to at least 0,3 mm. Most often, a conventional
chip surface is wider. A reinforcement bevel is, on the contrary, an utmost narrow
surface formed between the proper chip surface and the clearance surface for reinforcing
the cutting edge along the cutting edge line 13 present between the chip surface and
the clearance surface. Also, the width of a reinforcement bevel may vary, depending
on the field of application. Most often, however, the width of a reinforcement bevel
is limited to the range of 0,05-0,15 mm and in exceptional cases somewhat greater,
however without being more than 0,25 mm.
[0026] The chip surface 10 included in the milling insert according to the invention is
narrower than the primary clearance surface 8, but has a width of at least 0,3 mm.
By this relationship, it is guaranteed, on one hand, thanks to the ample width of
the primary clearance surface 8 in comparison with the one of the chip surface, that
the cutting edge becomes resistant to the dominant cutting forces that attack the
milling insert in the direction of the chip surface 10, and, on the other hand, a
minimization of the grinding area of the surface needing to be ground on the chip
face,
viz. the chip surface 10. By the chip surface 10 having a smallest width of 0,3 mm, it
is, however, guaranteed that the chip can be formed against the chip surface 10 in
a reliable way in connection with the moderate cutting depths that are at hand in
connection with gear hobbing. However, depending on the application, the width measure
W3 may be increased from 0,3 mm, provided that W3 does not exceed W1. Namely, if W3
is increased with the purpose of allowing a greater feed per tooth and thereby a greater
chip thickness, also the cutting forces will increase, and therefore also W1 needs
to be increased to give a sufficiently strong cutting edge.
[0027] In the example, the width W3 of the chip surface 10 amounts to approx. 25 % of the
width W1 of the primary clearance surface 8. This relationship may
per se vary, but should be within the interval of 20-60 %.
[0028] The level difference ND (see Fig. 8) between the reference plane RP1 (= the level
of the chip surface 10) and the land 12 may in practice be small, e.g. within the
range of 0,02-0,10 mm. The essential is that the level difference guarantees that
a grinding wheel, which provides for the grinding of the chip surface 10, clears the
land 12.
[0029] In the embodiment shown in Figs. 1-9, the milling insert has a rhombic basic shape,
the two main edges 6 of the individual cutting edge 5 extending all the way from the
nose edge 7 to the reference line RL2, where they transform into the corresponding
main edges of the diametrically opposed cutting edge. The two main edges 6 are symmetrically
situated in relation to the reference line RL1, implying that RL1 in this embodiment
forms a bisector of the angle of convergence β of the cutting edges. In the example,
β amounts to 40° (β/2 = 20°).
[0030] In this case, the under side 2 of the milling insert (see Figs. 2 and 3) is formed
with a connecting surface, in which two pairs of grooves or female-like chutes are
included,
viz. on one hand two longitudinal grooves 14a, 14b, which are running from the nose edges
7 toward the centre axis of the milling insert, and on the other hand two transverse
grooves 15a, 15b, which extend perpendicular to the grooves 14a, 14b. When the cutting
edge 5a is indexed forward into an operative state in the appurtenant basic body of
the tool, the grooves 14a and 15a co-operate with two ridges that are formed in the
seat of the basic body of the tool and, in analogy with the grooves 14a, 15a, are
located perpendicular to each other. In this case, the plane surfaces 16, which surround
the grooves and which are situated in the lower reference plane RP2, will not rest
against any corresponding support surfaces in the seat. On the contrary, the milling
insert will abut by two V-shapedly arranged flank surfaces in the grooves 14a, 15a
against analogous flank surfaces along the ridges.
[0031] As pointed out above, the width of the individual chip surface 10 may vary in an
interval from 0,3 mm to a maximum value. This maximum value should be selected so
that the peripheral chip surface, which in this case continuous, obtains a projection
area that is less than 20 % of the total projection area of the upper side.
[0032] It should also be noted that the chip surface 10 in this case is plane and in its
entirety situated in the reference plane RP1 that defines the upper side of the milling
insert. For the sake of completeness, it should also be mentioned that the land 12
positioned inside the chip surface is unground, i.e., has the surface structure that
cemented carbide obtains after pressing and sintering. It should be axiomatic that
also the secondary clearance surface 9 is unground.
[0033] Reference is now made to Figs. 10 and 11 that illustrate an alternative milling insert
in which only one cutting edge 5 is included, which, like the cutting edges described
above, has a V-like contour shape. Thus, the cutting edge includes two main edges
6, which converge toward a nose or end cutting edge 7. In this case, however, the
nose edge 7 is not arched but straight, the same transforming into the straight main
edges 6 via so-called radius transitions 17. In addition, the nose edge 7 has an ample
length that generates comparatively wide gash bottoms between adjacent cogs. As a
consequence of this shape of the nose edge 7, the milling insert is particularly suitable
for the gear hobbing of gashes between involute teeth.
[0034] In the same way as previously, the cutting edge 5 is formed between a primary clearance
surface 8 and a chip surface 10 included in a peripheral border 11. Only the part
of the clearance face that connects to the cutting edge includes a secondary clearance
surface 9, which is off-plane from the primary one. However, the clearance face along
the rear portion of the milling insert is shown with trivial surfaces 18.
[0035] In this case, the milling insert is intended to be fixed by another tightening device
than a screw, preferably a clamp or another tightening device, which does not require
any hole in the milling insert. Furthermore, the under side 2 of the milling insert
consists of a plane surface, in which a long narrow groove 19 is countersunk. Said
groove 19 is running in the same direction as a bisector between the two main edges
6 of the cutting edge 5, and extends between the front and rear ends of the milling
insert. The purpose of the groove is to hold the milling insert fixed, when the plane
under side is pressed against a likewise plane support surface, which has been formed
with a guiding, long narrow ridge (not shown). The groove may also be utilized to
clamp the milling insert in an accurately defined location in connection with the
grinding of the chip surface 10 and the primary clearance surface 8.
[0036] The manufacture of the milling insert according to the invention is carried out in
several steps, a first one of which consists of pressing and sintering a cemented
carbide forming powder mass while forming a cutting body having the general geometrical
shape that is shown in the drawings. In a second step, grinding of the individual
cutting edge follows. This is effected by so-called peripheral grinding, in which
an abrasive, e.g. a grinding wheel, is brought peripherally along the cutting edge
at the same time as the milling insert is held fixed in a holder. Because the grinding
of not only the primary clearance surface but also the chip surface can be effected
by peripheral grinding (contrary to face grinding of an entirely plane upper side),
the two grinding operations can be accomplished in one and the same set-up, i.e.,
without the milling insert being moved between different stations. This means that
the control of the grinding operations will be exceptionally good. More precisely,
the grinding may be carried out so that the spatial location of the cutting edge line
in relation to centre axis can be predetermined by tolerances in the order of 0,001
mm. This ensures that the surfaces generated by the milling insert in the workpiece,
e.g. the flank surfaces of cogs, obtain an exceptionally good dimensional accuracy
already in connection with the milling.
[0037] In a possibly third step, the milling insert may be surface coated using a microscopically
thin protective layer with the purpose of strengthening the individual cutting edge
and increasing the operative service life thereof.
[0038] An advantage of the invention besides allowing peripheral grinding in one and the
same set-up - with the ensuing dimensional accuracy - is that the grinding can be
carried out fast and easy and with a minimum of wear of the abrasives, which need
to sweep over surfaces having a minimal area for providing the desired cutting edge.
[0039] A usually occurring milling method, besides gear hobbing, is slit cutting. In this
case, a rotatable, circular disc is used, the periphery of which is equipped with
a plurality of tangentially spaced-apart milling inserts. In certain applications,
slit cutting gives a particularly efficient machining, e.g. when long and deep slots
are to be formed in a workpiece. Because the milling insert according to the invention
on one hand is cutting trilaterally, i.e., includes cutting edges having three simultaneously
active part edges,
viz. the nose edge and the two main edges, and on the other hand can be manufactured at
high dimensional accuracy, the same is excellently well suitable also for use in slitting
cutters.
Feasible Modifications of the Invention
[0040] The invention is not limited only to the embodiments described above and shown in
the drawings. Thus, the invention may also be applied to other milling inserts than
exactly such ones that are intended for gear hobbing and slit cutting, respectively.
Concerning the ground chip surface of the individual cutting edge, it should be pointed
out that the same does not necessarily have to be plane, but may be slightly arched
in cross-section, e.g. concavely arched. Neither does the chip surface need to be
located with the outer and inner, respectively, boundary lines thereof situated in
one and the same plane. Thus, the chip surface may be tilted in relation to the upper
reference plane of the milling insert, more precisely by the cutting edge angle (the
angle between the chip surface and the primary clearance surface) increasing in comparison
with the exemplified cutting edge angle. In other words, the chip surface may be located
so that its inner boundary line is on a higher level than the outer cutting edge line.
In the exemplified embodiments, the chip surface as well as the primary clearance
surface is of a uniform width along its entire extension. Neither is this feature
any necessary condition for the realisation of the invention. Thus, it is possible
to reduce the width of the primary clearance surface in the backward direction from
the nose edge. Furthermore, the chip surface of one of the main edges may be wider
than the chip surface along the other main edge. Neither needs the individual main
edge to have a straight shape, but instead have a slightly cambered shape. Furthermore,
the two main edges need not be symmetrically placed in relation to the reference line
RL1. Thus, the angle between one of the main edges in relation to said reference line
may differ from the angle between the reference line and the other main edge, for
instance with the purpose of providing cog flanks having different flank angles. It
should also be mentioned that the indexable milling insert according to Figs. 1-9
does not need to have a rhombic basic shape. Thus, shorter main edges, which together
with a nose edge form a V-shaped cutting edge, may be connected to an intermediate
section of the milling insert, the side surfaces of which run parallel to each other.
Furthermore, the plane difference between the primary clearance surface and the secondary
one may be provided in another way than by locating the primary clearance surface
on a border-like bulge. Thus, the milling insert may be formed so that the primary
clearance surface, via a lower boundary line, transforms into a secondary clearance
surface, the clearance angle of which is greater than the clearance angle of the primary
clearance surface. In an analogous way, the chip surface may, via an inner boundary
line, transform into a land that is tilted in relation to the chip surface. Thus,
the essential is that an abrasive can be swept over the grinding surface in question,
without contacting the adjacent, unground surface (the secondary clearance surface
and the land, respectively). The fact that the chip surface may be peripherally ground
instead of being face ground, entails in addition a freedom for the designer to form,
adjacent to the central hole of the milling insert, a ring-shaped reinforcement that
can be allowed to project above the plane in which the chip surface is situated. A
further alternative to separate the planes of the primary and secondary clearance
surfaces from each other is to, on one hand, form the primary clearance surface on
a bulge of the type that has been exemplified in the drawings, and, on the other hand,
give the secondary, lower clearance surface a clearance angle that is smaller than
the one of the primary one. In case the nose edge of the milling insert is round,
as exemplified in Figs. 1-9, its shape may be modified so far that a narrow and centrally
located chamfer surface is formed in (e.g. ground in into) the convexly arched, front
portion of the primary clearance surface. In such a way, a central, extremely short
part edge is obtained (e.g. within the range of 0,05-0,50 mm), which may be straight
if the chamfer surface is made plane, or arched (concave or convex) if the chamfer
surface is made arched. Such a, diminutive front part cutting edge is in certain applications
desired in connection with the milling of cogs.
1. Milling insert, comprising an upper side (1), an under side (2), and a clearance face
(3) extending between the same, as well as a cutting edge (5), which is running along
a cutting edge line (13) and formed in a transition between the upper side and the
clearance face and includes two main edges (6) that converge toward and meet in a
nose edge (7), the milling insert having a positive cutting geometry so far that a
clearance angle (α) between the clearance face and a normal to the upper side is acute,
characterized in that the cutting edge (5) is formed between two ground part surfaces situated on both
sides of the cutting edge line (13), viz., on one hand, a primary clearance surface (8), which is included in the clearance
face (3) and is off-plane from a secondary clearance surface (9), and, on the other
hand, a peripheral chip surface (10), which is included in the upper side (1) and
situated on a higher level than a land (12) being inside, and which is narrower than
the primary clearance surface (8) as well as has a width (W3) of at least 0,3 mm.
2. Milling insert according to claim 1, characterized in that the width (W1) of the primary clearance surface (8) is smaller than the width (W2)
of the secondary clearance surface (9).
3. Milling insert according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the width (W3) of the chip surface (10) amounts to at most 50 % of the width (W1)
of the primary clearance surface (8).
4. Milling insert according to any one of the preceding claims, characterized in that the chip surface (10) has a projection area that amounts to at most 20 % of the entire
projection area of the upper side (1).
5. Milling insert according to any one of the preceding claims, characterized in that the chip surface (10) is plane.
6. Milling insert according to claim 5, characterized in that the chip surface (10) is in its entirety situated in a reference plane (RP1) that
defines the upper side of the milling insert.
7. Milling insert according to any one of the preceding claims, characterized in that the under side (2) of the milling insert includes a long narrow groove (14, 19),
which is running in the same direction as a longitudinal axis (RL1) between the two
main edges (6) of the cutting edge.
8. Milling insert according to claim 7, characterized in that the longitudinal axis (RL1) is a bisector (RL1) between the two main edges (6) of
the cutting edge.
9. Milling insert according to claim 7 or 8, characterized in that the under side (2) of the milling insert also includes a second groove (15), which
is running perpendicular to the first (14) one.